Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuTwo phony fortune tellers get mixed up with gypsies.Two phony fortune tellers get mixed up with gypsies.Two phony fortune tellers get mixed up with gypsies.
Lita Chevret
- Slot Machine Señorita
- (Nicht genannt)
Bill Elliott
- Party Guest
- (Nicht genannt)
June Glory
- Chorus Girl
- (Nicht genannt)
Audree Henderson
- Flapper
- (Nicht genannt)
Alice Jans
- Chorus Girl
- (Nicht genannt)
Bob Kortman
- Gypsy
- (Nicht genannt)
Kalla Pasha
- Hotheaded Cowboy
- (Nicht genannt)
Betty Recklaw
- Flapper
- (Nicht genannt)
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Made during the early talkie era, this was only Bert Wheeler and Robert Woolsey's second movie after Rio Rita. Along with them is usual leading lady Dorothy Lee and Jobyna Howland who is hilariously mismatched with Woolsey as she towers over him! Many fine musical numbers and comedy routines abound including one about a keg of beer which W & W try to take from U.S. customs to Mexico during this Prohibition period. There's also a funny sequence of Wheeler in drag. And there are three two-strip Technicolor musical numbers that must have been awe-inspiring when first presented to 1930 audiences. So on that note, I recommend The Cuckoos
RKO in using Wheeler&Woolsey first put them in their big budget films where they were used as comic relief. They were in Rio Rita and then in the original operetta for the screen Dixiana. The Cuckoos is along those same lines, being based on the Kalmar-Ruby musical The Ramblers which ran for 289 performances in the 1926-1927 season on Broadway.
Oddly enough the boys took the place on Broadway of another comedy team that would soon be on the big screen, Bobby Clark and Paul McCullough. Seeing Wheeler&Woolsey in their respective roles I can see how Clark& McCullough could have done this on Broadway.
Like most of the musical comedies of the Twenties the plot was an airy bit of delightful nonsense. Wheeler&Woolsey are a pair of fortune tellers who run afoul of gypsies in Mexico led by Mitchell Lewis who don't like them chiseling in on their racket. At the same time Lewis develops a particular dislike for Wheeler chiseling in on his time with Dorothy Lee.
Lewis and the gypsies are hired by the mysterious Baron played by Ivan Lebedeff who wants heiress June Clyde kidnapped for himself. June likes aviator Hugh Trevor instead, who wouldn't, but her aunt Jobyna Howland and holder of the family purse strings thinks Trevor's the fortune hunter. This mind you with Woolsey panting after her like Groucho does with Margaret Dumont.
It's the team of Wheeler, Woolsey and Trevor that's off to rescue the heiress from the gypsies. The boys have some nice comic bits here, my favorite is them liberating a keg of real beer from customs inspectors as they go back to Mexico. Remember this is Prohibition and many jokes concerning the Volstead Act and its consequences abound in The Cuckoos.
By the way the title specifically refers to not just Wheeler&Woolsey, but to a pair of cuckoo clock birds who are quite inebriated who the film cuts to before one of the three color sequences.
For the most part The Cuckoos is just a photographed Broadway musical just like The Marx Brothers The Cocoanuts and Animal Crackers. Still that for me is an added attraction.
Bert Kalmar and Harry Ruby got two hit songs from the score of The Ramblers that appeared here and later in the biographical film about the songwriting duo Three Little Words. All Alone Monday and I Love You So Much still retain an enduring popularity to this day.
Watching Wheeler&Woolsey try and imagine Eddie Cantor teamed with Groucho Marx is the best way to describe their comedy. Knowing that fans of Eddie and Groucho can appreciate Wheeler&Woolsey and might be tempted to see them.
If they do, I really suggest The Cuckoos as a good place to start.
Oddly enough the boys took the place on Broadway of another comedy team that would soon be on the big screen, Bobby Clark and Paul McCullough. Seeing Wheeler&Woolsey in their respective roles I can see how Clark& McCullough could have done this on Broadway.
Like most of the musical comedies of the Twenties the plot was an airy bit of delightful nonsense. Wheeler&Woolsey are a pair of fortune tellers who run afoul of gypsies in Mexico led by Mitchell Lewis who don't like them chiseling in on their racket. At the same time Lewis develops a particular dislike for Wheeler chiseling in on his time with Dorothy Lee.
Lewis and the gypsies are hired by the mysterious Baron played by Ivan Lebedeff who wants heiress June Clyde kidnapped for himself. June likes aviator Hugh Trevor instead, who wouldn't, but her aunt Jobyna Howland and holder of the family purse strings thinks Trevor's the fortune hunter. This mind you with Woolsey panting after her like Groucho does with Margaret Dumont.
It's the team of Wheeler, Woolsey and Trevor that's off to rescue the heiress from the gypsies. The boys have some nice comic bits here, my favorite is them liberating a keg of real beer from customs inspectors as they go back to Mexico. Remember this is Prohibition and many jokes concerning the Volstead Act and its consequences abound in The Cuckoos.
By the way the title specifically refers to not just Wheeler&Woolsey, but to a pair of cuckoo clock birds who are quite inebriated who the film cuts to before one of the three color sequences.
For the most part The Cuckoos is just a photographed Broadway musical just like The Marx Brothers The Cocoanuts and Animal Crackers. Still that for me is an added attraction.
Bert Kalmar and Harry Ruby got two hit songs from the score of The Ramblers that appeared here and later in the biographical film about the songwriting duo Three Little Words. All Alone Monday and I Love You So Much still retain an enduring popularity to this day.
Watching Wheeler&Woolsey try and imagine Eddie Cantor teamed with Groucho Marx is the best way to describe their comedy. Knowing that fans of Eddie and Groucho can appreciate Wheeler&Woolsey and might be tempted to see them.
If they do, I really suggest The Cuckoos as a good place to start.
After their success in supporting comic roles in RIO RITA, Wheeler and Woolsey were given the leads in this stage musical, which comes to the screen pretty much as if it were a filmed stage show (most of these early adaptations look like this - witness RIO RITA, WHOOPEE! etc.).
Not much plot and what there is follows the musical comedy formula. The romantic leads are dull, but we're not watching this for them. W & W are as usual marvelous together, with one gag word play after another. It's a most enjoyable 97 minutes.
One smash hit song from the Bolton/Kalmar/Ruby score (which by the way is universally tuneful and quality)is I LOVE YOU SO MUCH. Ten songs were retained from the stage show for the film.
There are three two-strip Technicolor inserts (reds, greens, browns) : a. the first act finale to the song GOODBYE, occurring from the 53 minute mark to 57:30 (4:30 minutes); b. the second act DANCE THE DEVIL AWAY number, occurring from 1 hour 21 minutes, 20 seconds to 1 hour, 23, minutes, 40 seconds (2:20 minutes); c. the Finale, occurring from 1 hour 34 minutes, 20 seconds to 1 hour, 36 minutes, 55 seconds (2:35).
Technicolor totals: 9:25 minutes.
Not much plot and what there is follows the musical comedy formula. The romantic leads are dull, but we're not watching this for them. W & W are as usual marvelous together, with one gag word play after another. It's a most enjoyable 97 minutes.
One smash hit song from the Bolton/Kalmar/Ruby score (which by the way is universally tuneful and quality)is I LOVE YOU SO MUCH. Ten songs were retained from the stage show for the film.
There are three two-strip Technicolor inserts (reds, greens, browns) : a. the first act finale to the song GOODBYE, occurring from the 53 minute mark to 57:30 (4:30 minutes); b. the second act DANCE THE DEVIL AWAY number, occurring from 1 hour 21 minutes, 20 seconds to 1 hour, 23, minutes, 40 seconds (2:20 minutes); c. the Finale, occurring from 1 hour 34 minutes, 20 seconds to 1 hour, 36 minutes, 55 seconds (2:35).
Technicolor totals: 9:25 minutes.
A real early one for vaudeville team Wheeler and Woolsey. and oh. my. god. SOOOOO many song and dance numbers. each time we go into another song, the reel has been colorized, and they show cuckoos in a cuckoo clock. Personallyl, i would have preferred a stronger, tighter script, and less singing, but that's a personal preference. There ARE a couple really clever bits in here, and of course, they play around with word phrasing. and also show some flesh on the dancing girls. This was only 1930, so even though most of the film takes place in mexico (theoretically), the costumes really are quite skimpy. Co-stars Dorothy Lee and Jobyna Howland. it's pretty good if you stick with it to the end, very similar to a Marx brothers film. lots of horsing around and a love story in between the chases, falls, and knife fights. Directed by Paul Sloane, who had worked with Edison from the earlly days, then moved to other studios. Pretty good. can't go wrong with a Wheeler and Woolsey film.
In their follow-up to their hit film debut, Rio Rita (1929), with Bebe Daniels and John Boles, W&W star in another stage musical--this time with less success. The plot is stupid and some of the scenes seem to have no connection to whatever storyline is being played out. But W&W are fun, there are a couple good songs ("I Love You So Much"), and the comedy bits are dated but funny. Following the formula of the day, there are young lovers, Hugh Trevor and June Clyde, and a comedy foil--here the wonderful Jobyna Howland. At 6 feet tall and in heels, Howland towers over W&W and works especially well with Robert Woolsey. Some of the jokes are surprisingly risqué, Howland's character is named Fannie Furst (wrong in the IMDb listing as Hurst). As usual, pretty Dorothy Lee is on hand as Wheeler's girl friend. Two technicolor sequences, one featuring Lee in an elaborate production number in hell. Lee and Howland joined W&W in other films; Tall Hugh Trevor (not bad considering the cluck role he has) died a few years after this film following surgery. If you like W&W, you'll like The Cuckoos.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesFans of this film have wondered as to the identity of the two women who are dining at the casino early in the film. They enjoy a lengthy sequence when Wheeler & Woolsey sit at their table and flirt with them as the two women feed them straight-lines so Wheeler & Woolsey can give the comedic rejoinder. The girl playing straight for Bert Wheeler is Audree Henderson. (Though the trade papers of the day would occasionally misspell her first name as Audrey.) She was a contract player at "R.K.O." at the time The Cuckoos was filmed. Audree later became the fourth wife of film director A. Edward Sutherland from 8 January 1933, until they were divorced on 11 December 1935. The actress playing straight for Robert Woolsey is Betty Recklaw. She appeared in small roles in a number of films made for different studios during the late twenties and early thirties.
- PatzerWhen Billy lands his plane, he motions to shut off the engine - and its sound stops instantly, even though the prop is still turning.
- Zitate
Flapper: You're Americans, aren't you?
Professor Cunningham: Yes, yes, but we can't lend you any money.
- Alternative VersionenThere are still several TV prints around that are missing the Technicolor sequences. The recently restored print seems to be complete, including the long lost finale.
- VerbindungenReferenced in The Lady Consents (1936)
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Details
Box Office
- Budget
- 407.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 37 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.20 : 1
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